Jan 22 2019 Topics Due Process • Founding Era & History • Federalism & Separation of Powers Blog Post News Defending Substantive Due Process on Originalist Grounds Devin Watkins Evan Bernick and Randy Barnett have written a wonderful paper called “No Arbitrary Power: an...
May 27 2022 Topics Separation of Powers Blog Post Congress Must Decide How to Choose Between Courts and Agency Adjudication Devin Watkins For some time, the Securities and Exchange Commission has had a choice of prosecutorial forums:...
Oct 13 2015 Blog Post News A Speaker Must Be a Member of the House J. Harvie Wilkinson, David F. Forte Since 1377 when the Rolls of Parliament noted that the House of Commons had a...
Dec 5 2022 Topics Administrative Law & Regulation • Religious Liberty Blog Post News Religious Liberty Update on U.S. Congress and Executive Branch Actions Christine Kimberly Pratt Congress SENATE 1. On November 30, 2022, the Senate passed H.R. 8404, “Respect for Marriage...
Dec 21 2022 Topics Founding Era & History Blog Post News December Is a Good Time to Celebrate the American Revolution John Kennerly Davis This month includes the anniversary of a historic action taken by the British Crown that...
Jun 30 2016 Blog Post News The Legitimacy of the Brexit Referendum Richard Ekins As all the world knows, last Thursday the British people voted in a referendum about...
Feb 15 2005 Publication White Papers Unlawful Belligerency and its Implications Under International Law David B. Rivkin, Lee A. Casey, Darin R. Bartram By: Lee A. Casey, David B. Rivkin, Jr. & Darin R. Bartram* President Bush's Military...
Mar 15 2023 Publication Federalist Society Review Text-and-History or Means-End Scrutiny? A Response to Professor Nelson Lund's Critique of Bruen Stephen P. Halbrook Federalist Society Review, Volume 24 Professor Nelson Lund’s “Bruen’s Preliminary Preservation of the Second Amendment,” recently published in the Federalist...
Jul 21 2023 Publication Federalist Society Review Is Congress a Salvageable Institution? Ted Hirt Federalist Society Review, Volume 24 A review of Philip A. Wallach, Why Congress (Oxford University Press 2023) Constitutional law...
Dec 4 2019 Topics Administrative Law & Regulation • Civil Rights Blog Post News Usual, But Wholly Misunderstood, Effects of Policies on Measures of Racial Disparity Now Being Seen in Ferguson and the UK and Soon to Be Seen in Baltimore James Scanlan In a February 22, 2016 commentary for The Hill titled “Things DoJ doesn’t know about...
Topics
Defending Substantive Due Process on Originalist Grounds
Evan Bernick and Randy Barnett have written a wonderful paper called “No Arbitrary Power: an...
Topics
Congress Must Decide How to Choose Between Courts and Agency Adjudication
For some time, the Securities and Exchange Commission has had a choice of prosecutorial forums:...
A Speaker Must Be a Member of the House
Since 1377 when the Rolls of Parliament noted that the House of Commons had a...
Topics
Religious Liberty Update on U.S. Congress and Executive Branch Actions
Congress SENATE 1. On November 30, 2022, the Senate passed H.R. 8404, “Respect for Marriage...
Topics
December Is a Good Time to Celebrate the American Revolution
This month includes the anniversary of a historic action taken by the British Crown that...
The Legitimacy of the Brexit Referendum
As all the world knows, last Thursday the British people voted in a referendum about...
Unlawful Belligerency and its Implications Under International Law
David B. Rivkin, Lee A. Casey, Darin R. Bartram
By: Lee A. Casey, David B. Rivkin, Jr. & Darin R. Bartram* President Bush's Military...
Text-and-History or Means-End Scrutiny? A Response to Professor Nelson Lund's Critique of Bruen
Stephen P. Halbrook
Federalist Society Review, Volume 24
Professor Nelson Lund’s “Bruen’s Preliminary Preservation of the Second Amendment,” recently published in the Federalist...
Is Congress a Salvageable Institution?
Ted Hirt
Federalist Society Review, Volume 24
A review of Philip A. Wallach, Why Congress (Oxford University Press 2023) Constitutional law...
Topics
Usual, But Wholly Misunderstood, Effects of Policies on Measures of Racial Disparity Now Being Seen in Ferguson and the UK and Soon to Be Seen in Baltimore
In a February 22, 2016 commentary for The Hill titled “Things DoJ doesn’t know about...